Our society is changing and with the huge popularity of the Harry Potter series, mythical worlds and magic like that of D&D have become much more mainstream; however there is still a lot more to role playing games than just one series, and, as a teaching tool, they are invaluable.

Role-playing is at the very heart of the commonly heard phrase “Fake it ’till you make it” – that is if you can pretend and act more confident and self-assured, you will become more confident and self-assured.

Kids are born with the innate ability to imagine, pretend, and transport themselves to other times and places through their imaginations. It is how they explore both the world around them and abstract adult concepts such as playing house and trying on new careers.

As children grow older, many become self conscious and are encouraged to join the “Real World.” Fantastical places and imagination are put away in the vaults of childhood and locked up tight. Role-playing games are a great way to keep your imagination alive and offers a great way to practice and grow your creativity.

The real challenge in raising kids is making sure they do not lose there creativity and ability to imagine. There is a saying: “Our children go into school a question mark and come out a period.” But where would we be without imagination? Without imagination, human innovation would simply not exists.

There are lots of activities you can do with your kids that involve imagination and role-play every day.

All you have to do is allow your younger children to take the lead. Get involved with their make-believe and ask leading questions that prompts their imagination. Have small children develop characters for their favorite toys and give them the starring roles in new adventures.

You can also stretch your imagination and story telling skills by making up stories about the people and events going on around you. This encourages good listening skills in children since the stories you make up are verbal, but you can also incorporate art activities: draw or color a new world for your favorite characters to explore or build a model out of salt dough and paint it.

Older children can get involved in Role-playing groups offered as extra curricular activities in school or libraries, ask if there are any in your area! Role-playing is also a great way to learn and reinforce lessons and skills. This might include acting out the forming of your country in history class — for Canada, you can have different people or groups play each province, negotiating the terms of Confederation — or going through a “pretend” job interview to gain confidence and interviewing skills.

Whenever you can get kids and teens invested in something and learning through differentmultiple intelligences they will learn faster and retain the lessons longer. Role playing is a great way to to do this! What you can teach through role playing is limited only by YOUR imagination.

Do you have any concepts that you use role playing to teach your kids or students? Would you like to use role playing to teach a specific topic, but aren’t sure how? Please leave a comment or question below!

Wow! Great post thanks, I backlinked it on my blog. This subject has been resonating more and more with me lately. Gaming, mostly from computers and consoles, is becoming more and more a part of leisure time, especially kids. RPGs seem like a way to bring back the creativity, as well as offering opportunities for developing writing, socialization and art skills.
I would love to hear more tips on how to incorporate other types of learning into RPGs. I have a biology background, so many adventures involve systems ecology principles.
But stuff like what you’ve mentioned David, that’s inspirational, great!

Exploring all the different aspects of RPGs has been very exciting! I have conducted an interview with a Kids home-school RPG club founder that will be looking at RPGs from a Christian perspective, and I hope to conduct an interview with David too!